Paul Bley - At Copenhagen Jazz House (Live) (1994)
BAND/ARTIST: Paul Bley
- Title: At Copenhagen Jazz House
- Year Of Release: 1994
- Label: Steeplechase
- Genre: Jazz
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
- Total Time: 55:42
- Total Size: 239 Mb / 143 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Woogie 16:37
2. Check 8:28
3. Don't 12:43
4. Decade 5:55
5. Furioso 4:13
6. Bye 7:53
Performers:
Paul Bley, Piano
1. Woogie 16:37
2. Check 8:28
3. Don't 12:43
4. Decade 5:55
5. Furioso 4:13
6. Bye 7:53
Performers:
Paul Bley, Piano
Pianist Paul Bley took the styles and techniques associated with Oscar Peterson, Wynton Kelly, and Bill Evans to new levels of creative experimentation, becoming an indispensable force in modern music by combining the best elements in bop and early modern jazz with extended free improvisation and procedural dynamics often found in 20th-century chamber music. This approach places him in league with such diverse artists as Red Garland, Mal Waldron, Jaki Byard, Andrew Hill, Sun Ra, and Marilyn Crispell. Even a cursory overview of Bley's life and work can be pleasantly overwhelming, for he is among the most heavily recorded of all jazz pianists and his story is inextricably intertwined with the evolution of modern jazz during the second half of the 20th century. His three dates with Jimmy Giuffre's trio, most notably 1961's Free Fall, were landmark studies in vanguard modalism. With Barrage from 1965 and Mr. Joy from 1968, the pianist became familiar to many American jazz fans. In the early '70s, Bley issued the piano solo offering Open, To Love -- it remains his most prophetic and lyrical solo offering, laying out the juxtapositions for pointillism and space that would mark his career. He also resumed working with Giuffre during the late part of the decade and into the early '80s. Bley was prolific in the 1990s as a leader and as a collaborator. He took part in several historic dates, including Annette with Franz Koglmann and Gary Peacock, Memoirs with Charlie Haden and Motian, a pair of ECM trio dates with Barre Phillips and Evan Parker (Time Will Tell and Sankt Gerold Variations), and Not Two, Not One with Peacock and Motian. Bley began the 21st century as active as he had left the 20th, working as a collaborator with Kenny Millions, Mario Pavone, and a young Jakob Bro. The final two recordings credited to Bley as a leader were solo offerings: the studio album About Time, in 2007, and Play Blue (Oslo Concert), recorded in 2008 but unissued until 2014.
Jazz | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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